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Career test for MIT students

See which careers fit your traits — based on what 578+ MIT alumni actually went on to do.

Private research universityMassachusetts
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What MIT grads actually do

Based on 578 notable MIT alumni with Wikipedia pages. Data: Wikidata (CC0).

university teacher
208
engineer
111
computer scientist
101
economist
72
physicist
72
mathematician
69
politician
38
writer
33
researcher
31
architect
26
inventor
25
chemist
25

Notable MIT alumni

Robert C. Merton
Robert C. Merton
university teacher · economist
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
finance minister · bank manager
Douglas McIlroy
Douglas McIlroy
mathematician · engineer
Piermaria Oddone
Piermaria Oddone
particle physicist
Alan Kotok
Alan Kotok
engineer · computer scientist
Gordon Bell
Gordon Bell
manager · university teacher
Dominic A. Antonelli
Dominic A. Antonelli
engineer · astronaut
Kofi Annan
Kofi Annan
diplomat · politician

Salary outlook for top MIT career paths

National median annual wage (BLS Occupational Employment Statistics).

engineer
10th–90th percentile: $62,130$177,020
$111,970
median / yr
computer scientist
10th–90th percentile: $81,450$233,110
$145,080
median / yr
economist
10th–90th percentile: $62,520$216,900
$115,730
median / yr
physicist
10th–90th percentile: $80,950$232,940
$155,680
median / yr
mathematician
10th–90th percentile: $62,260$183,500
$116,440
median / yr
politician
10th–90th percentile: $21,010$129,510
$47,290
median / yr

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Take the Career Match test — RIASEC framework used by 60,000+ students. See which careers from this MIT alumni list match your traits.

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About MIT

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is a private research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1861 to advance "useful knowledge", the university has played a significant role in the development of many areas of technology and science. William Barton Rogers founded MIT to accelerate American industrialization through scientific knowledge. Initially funded by a federal land grant, the institute adopted a German polytechnic model emphasizing laboratory instruction in applied science and engineering, and moved from Boston's Back Bay to its current campus in Cambridge in 1916. Early growth came through research contracts with private industry, though the institute remained financially constrained and focused primarily on practical engineering education into the 1930s. MIT's transformation as a research enterprise began during World War II, when projects like the Radiation Laboratory made it the nation's largest non-industrial R&D contractor. Graduate enrollment and research funding grew rapidly in the postwar decades as faculty members such as Vannevar Bush helped shape federal support for basic science. In the late twentieth century, MIT became closely associated with computer science, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, open-source software development, and "big science" initiatives like the Apollo Guidance Computer and the LIGO project. Engineering remains its largest school, though MIT has also developed prominent programs in basic science, economics, management, architecture, and humanities. MIT has an urban campus that extends more than a mile (1.6 km) along the Charles River. Academic buildings are connected by an extensive corridor system. MIT's off-campus operations include Lincoln Laboratory and Haystack Observatory, as well as affiliated laboratories such as the Broad and Whitehead Institutes. Undergraduate life is known for hands-on research and elaborate pranks. Tuition is generally not charged to undergraduates from families with incomes below $200,000, and most graduate students are funded by research. As of October 2024, 105 Nobel laureates, 26 Turing Award winners, and 8 Fields Medalists have been affiliated with MIT as alumni, faculty members, or researchers. Alumni and faculty have founded many notable companies and served in senior government positions in the United States and abroad.

Source: Wikipedia · Licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0.

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